“A good photograph is knowing where to stand”*…

Ansel Adams’ Monolith, the Face of Half Dome, Yosemite National Park, California (1927)

Today’s post– commemorating the 124th birthday of a man who knew exactly where to stand– reverses (Roughly) Daily‘s usual format, opening with the almanac entry…

We might send thoughtfully-composed birthday greetings to Ansel Adams; he was born on this date in 1902. A photographer who specialized in landscapes, especially in black-and-white photos of the American West, he was hugely influential both in photography and in environmentalism.

Adams helped found Group f/64, an association of photographers advocating “pure” photography which favored sharp focus and the use of the full tonal range of a photograph; was a key advisor in establishing the photography department at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, and a founder of the photography journal Aperture.

His love of photography was born when, at age 12, he visited Yosemite and took his first shots. He became a life-long advocate for environmental conservation, a commitment deeply intertwined with his photographic practice. At one point, he contracted with the United States Department of the Interior to make photographs of national parks. For his work and his persistent advocacy, which helped expand the National Park system, he was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1980.

Visit the Ansel Adams Gallery to see more of Adams’ signature lanscape and natural wonder work.

Adams, c. 1950 (source)

###

On the occasion of Adams’ birthday, we might note that, working photographer that he was, he took commercial assignments from time to time– assignments focused on subjects not usually associated with Adams. Two of them are especially interesting…

A collection of photos taken for Fortune Magazine in Los Angeles in the run-up to World War II documented the lives of workers in Los Angeles’ booming aviation industry…

Lockheed Plant In Burbank Sunnyside Cemetary (next to an oil field) in Long Beach Lunctime for Douglas Company employees

More at “Ansel Adams’ Photos of Pre-War Los Angeles.”

And then, from the early 1960s, photos taken by Adams for Stanford’s PACE Program…

“Once it was a rich, sleepy school with rich, sleepy students; now it aims to be the ‘Harvard of the West’.” That was how Time magazine described Stanford University in the fall of 1962. The publication had been reporting on Stanford’s PACE program, a massive fundraising effort that the school launched to strive toward the kind of prominence that its founders Leland and Jane Stanford had originally envisioned. The core drive behind PACE, an acronym for Plan of Action for a Challenging Era, was for Stanford to transcend its “sleepy” backwater reputation (the “rich” part would remain) and emerge as a potential Western rival to the Ivy League universities on the East Coast.

When it came to PACE’s promotional materials for wooing donors, Stanford’s planning department hired Ansel Adams to produce the visuals. Adams was already well known and highly accomplished at the time, having shot the majority of his masterpiece landscapes depicting the natural grandeur of the American West. But in the early 1960s, he was also still a for-hire photographer trying to make a living in the Bay Area. According to archival letters, Adams and his team of photographers were contracted for $3,000 to produce a series of images from around the Stanford campus over a period of two months in early 1961.

The PACE program ultimately proved to be a resounding success, to the tune of $114 million in fundraising (nearly $1.1 billion today), which became foundational to Stanford’s present-day status as an ultra-elite university. In parallel fashion, Adams would eventually be considered the great American photographer of his era, an exceedingly rare household name in the world of photography, and a visual artist still highly celebrated in museums and pricey galleries around the world. However, his series of Stanford photographs was never recorded in his otherwise meticulous photo log and fell into deep obscurity, becoming all but never-before-seen images by the general public and unknown to even his biographers and archivists…

Students departing the Physics Lecture Hall (aka the Physics Tank) on the Stanford Campus in 1961 A class gathered on the lawn outside Wallenberg Hall, on the Stanford University campus, in 1961

More at “Lost California photos from Ansel Adams.”

* Ansel Adams

#anselAdams #art #aviation #aviationIndustry #culture #history #LosAngeles #PACE #photography #Stanford

I didn't know that Ansel Adams had documented the Japanese internment during WWII.

#photography
#WorldWarTwo
#AnselAdams

https://www.loc.gov/collections/ansel-adams-manzanar/about-this-collection/

About this Collection | Ansel Adams's Photographs of Japanese-American Internment at Manzanar | Digital Collections | Library of Congress

In 1943, Ansel Adams (1902-1984), America's most well-known photographer, documented the Manzanar War Relocation Center in California and the Japanese-Americans interned there during World War II. For the first time, digital scans of both Adams's original negatives and his photographic prints appear side by side allowing viewers to see Adams's darkroom technique, in particular, how he cropped his prints. Adams's Manzanar work is a departure from his signature style landscape photography. Although a majority of the more than 200 photographs are portraits, the images also include views of daily life, agricultural scenes, and sports and leisure activities (see Collection Highlights). When offering the collection to the Library in 1965, Adams said in a letter, "The purpose of my work was to show how these people, suffering under a great injustice, and loss of property, businesses and professions, had overcome the sense of defeat and dispair [sic] by building for themselves a vital community in an arid (but magnificent) environment....All in all, I think this Manzanar Collection is an important historical document, and I trust it can be put to good use." The web site also includes digital images of the first edition of Born Free and Equal, Adams's publication based on his work at Manzanar.

The Library of Congress

Un Ansel Adams insolito nella mostra "Beyond the Wilderness: Ansel Adams in 1940s Los Angeles"

https://petapixel.com/2026/01/14/ansel-adams-photos-of-pre-war-los-angeles-feature-in-new-exhibit/

#photography #fotografia #mostra #AnselAdams #LA #1940s

Ansel Adams' Photos of Pre-War Los Angeles Feature in New Exhibit

Adams' work wasn't all mountains and rivers.

PetaPixel
Ansel Adams' Photos of Pre-War Los Angeles Feature in New Exhibit

Adams' work wasn't all mountains and rivers.

PetaPixel

Moonrise, Hernandez, New Mexico by Ansel Adams

Fond/Sound wrote:

A photo capturing a perfectly normal scene, in a very rarely seen locale, captures perfectly what Ansel saw as uniquely interesting. Capturing twilight in a place of settling, far from exploding American urbanity, one can still see that rugged, palpable wilderness that man still struggles to accurately harness. Dominated by black, with clouds bursting the horizon of a setting sun, far off, in the desert distance, snow-capped mountains seem unreachable, for those who live in the modesty of the foreground. Devoid of a starry night, the crosses on the ground seem to provide a layer of inner light, as if grasping for that last bit of sunlight before “everything” goes to rest. This is something you hear in the music of The Journey. The scale is enormous, even though everything at the foreground seems so small and tethered.

https://www.fondsound.com/thomas-almqvist-the-journey-1980/

#Photography #AnselAdams #NewMexico #Moonrise

Ended Thursday and welcomed Friday with The Journey by Thomas Almqvist, released on Mistlur in 1980.

Fond/Sound wrote:

...Endlessly hypnotic, The Journey shows those teachings of the shaman Don Juan: how to follow those cracks between lightness and darkness, into a world (or in this case, a musical one) not entirely like Thomas’s own. In case you never get a chance to visit this beautiful land, this is a great way to see, what I’ve seen in it. I do believe there is something to this bit of conscious, musical dreaming…

https://www.fondsound.com/thomas-almqvist-the-journey-1980/

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C_EdMZEphw0&list=RDC_EdMZEphw0&start_radio=1

#ThomasAlmqvist #CarlosCastaneda #Music #Jazz #AnselAdams

Early light, cold water, and a burst of motion — elk at Evergreen Lake on an autumn morning. A study in rhythm and radiance, where the wild shapes light itself.
#EvergreenColorado #FineArtPhotography #ErnstHaas #AnselAdams #WildlifeArt #ColoradoElk #NatureCollectors #GalleryPhotography #RobertNPhotographer
Morning light threading between the sandstone giants of Monument Valley — structure, silence, and color in perfect balance. Haas–Adams hybrid tonality for those who love the sculpted glow of the desert.
#MonumentValley #FineArtPhotography #SouthwestLight #ErnstHaas #AnselAdams #DesertGeometry #LandscapeCollectors #RobertNPhotographer #AmericanWest #MatteMetalPrints #GalleryWall
A quiet dawn over Prague — gold reflections and indigo light merge on the Charles Bridge. Haas warmth meets Adams precision, transforming stillness into cinematic depth.
✨ Limited edition print available in 24×36 matte metal or 20×30 baryta paper.
#FineArtPhotography #Prague #CharlesBridge #ErnstHaas #AnselAdams #ArtCollector #TravelArt #BlueAndGold #CinematicLight #GalleryPrint #RobertNPhotographer
Endless desert road. Red rock heat. One Jeep alone in the Valley of Fire.
A Haas + Adams hybrid blending painterly color with precision tone.
Now available in signed, limited-edition matte-metal prints.
#ValleyOfFire #FineArtLandscape #ErnstHaas #AnselAdams #AmericanWest #DesertRoad #NevadaLandscape #GalleryPrint #CollectorsEdition #MatteMetalPrint #RobertNPhotographer